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Depression glass patterns range from simple to ornate, but whatever the pattern, their beauty sparkles just as brightly today ...
Many of the most coveted patterns of Depression glass come from the first part of the Great Depression. This is true for ...
Petalware particularly shines in plates and serving dishes ... The milky green finish of Jeannette Jadeite stands out among Depression glass patterns (since most are translucent) and has become ...
They had trinkets stashed in flamingo pink candy dishes, munched on biscuits from emerald green ... plates and bases, and end with honeycomb-patterned Yorktown. ‘Warman’s Depression Glass ...
Depression glass, as it came to be known, was produced in a wide range of bright colors—pink, pale blue, green, amber ... decorative serving plates, cigarette boxes, and candlesticks were ...
Depression glass clubs across the country ... turned around to see a woman shining a black-light flashlight on a green plate. A few minutes later, a man joined her with a black box that began ...
For Ronnie and Gloria Broadbent, collecting Depression glass is more than finding treasure. With each richly colored dinner plate, vase or candlestick, the Broadbents are preserving a piece of ...
The goblets were known as pink and green Depression glass, sometimes called watermelon glass because of the color combination. Popular in the 1920s and '30s, the bicolored glassware has become ...
I started by Googling “green Depression glass clear base,” and immediately ... Hocking made to go with a bubble pattern it use for plates and bowls, called Inspiration. The Inspiration ...